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August 08, 2008 |

U.S. Seeks at Least 30 Years for Bin Laden Driver

Salim Hamdan, convicted on Wednesday of aiding terrorism by chauffeuring bin Laden around Afghanistan at the time of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001, pleaded on Thursday with a military jury to spare him from a life in prison. He apologized for the "innocent people" who died in the attacks and said he worked as Osama bin Laden's driver only because he needed a job. Prosecutors asked for a sentence of no less than 30 years, asking the six Pentagon-appointed jurors to make an example of him.
4 minute read
May 19, 2006 |

Former Client Perot Sues Hughes & Luce Over Flight Museum Troubles

A T-38 Talon training jet in Dallas' Frontiers of Flight Museum is central to a high-flying legal dispute. H. Ross Perot Jr. -- son of famous Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot Sr. -- tried to get the government to let him fly the plane as an operable museum centerpiece, becoming the subject of a probe in the process. Now Perot and others are suing Hughes & Luce, which advised them on the plane purchase, and Hughes & Luce partner Stephen G. Gleboff, who initially represented Perot's interests.
13 minute read
July 05, 2011 |

Stores find success by focusing on the hunt

Trader Joe's, the specialty grocery chain, might not have the cheapest toilet paper or the most varieties of ketchup, but it hooks customers with mango butter, chocolate-covered pomegranate seeds and cilantro-and-jalapeno hummus.
6 minute read
September 12, 2012 |

EEOC Locks Down Employers' Use of Arrest and Conviction Information

In April 2012, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission issued an extensive guidance that expands the EEOC's review of employers' use of arrest/conviction information when charges are brought alleging that an employer's use of the information had a discriminatory effect.
7 minute read
October 22, 2007 |

Pena v. State

Because the independent testimony from the police officers was sufficient to connect Rodolfo Serna Pena to the cocaine, Pena did not suffer egregious harm due to the lack of an instruction regarding the corroboration requirement for the informant's testimony.
6 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book White Collar Crime: Business and Regulatory Offenses Authors: Otto G. Obermaier, Robert G. Morvillo (deceased), Robert J. Anello, Barry A. Bohrer View this Book

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March 22, 2007 |

Actor Woody Harrelson's Father Dies in Prison; Was Convicted of Killing Federal Judge

Actor Woody Harrelson's father, Charles Harrelson, has died of a heart attack at the age of 69 in the Supermax federal prison in Colorado where he was serving two life sentences. Charles Harrelson was convicted of murder in the May 29, 1979, slaying of U.S. District Judge John Wood Jr. outside his San Antonio home. Prosecutors said a drug dealer hired him to kill Wood because he did not want the judge to preside at his upcoming trial. Wood was the first federal judge to be killed in the 20th century.
2 minute read
September 18, 2006 |

Laura Foote Reiff

Leading Lawyers 2006: Laura Foote Reiff of Greenberg Traurig.
4 minute read
October 01, 2003 |

Your Whole World, In Your Hand

New PDAs offer phone, GPS and more!
6 minute read
October 24, 2002 |

Play That Funky Music

3 minute read
October 10, 2005 |

As Corporate Attorney, Miers Blasted 'Greedy' Trial Lawyers

As a corporate lawyer, Harriet Miers recommended to then-Gov. Bush that the Texas Supreme Court rather than the state Legislature decide if attorney fees should be limited -- a proposal that, had it come to fruition, would have "absolutely" constituted "legislating from the bench," said one trial lawyer. In a letter to Bush, Miers went on to unleash an assault on trial lawyers, suggesting they were "greedy" and had "brought shame" to Texas.
4 minute read

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